KILL THEM ALL - (49 Minute Video) - Posted by Clay Claiborne in April of
2011.
This BBC Documentary Reveals Atrocities Committed by the U.S. in Korea
During the War.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pws_qyQnCcU 

Kill 'em All': The American Military in Korea
By Jeremy Williams -
www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/coldwar/korea_usa_01.shtml 
In September 1999 an investigative team from the Associated Press broke a
story that shocked America. Fifty years before, they claimed, refugees
caught up in the Korean War were shot and strafed by US forces. Jeremy
Williams explores the repercussions of a brutal episode in Cold War history.
The Forgotten War
The Korean War was a bloody conflict. It left Korea, North and South, with
several million dead and the UN forces involved in the fighting with over
100,000 casualties. But despite fighting as intense and as violent as any
other conflict since World War Two, Korea has always been history's
'Forgotten War'.
While atrocities conducted both by North and South Korean forces have
already been documented, recently a much darker side to the US involvement
in the Korean War has begun to emerge. It casts a shadow over the conduct of
US forces during the conflict, particularly of officers and generals in
command. Declassified military documents recently found in the US National
Archives show clearly how US commanders repeatedly, and without ambiguity,
ordered forces under their control to target and kill Korean refugees caught
on the battlefield. More disturbing still have been the published
testimonies of Korean survivors who recall such killings, and the frank
accounts of those American veterans brave enough to admit involvement.
Korean captured by US soldier (c)
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/about/copyright.shtml> The Korean War began on
25 June 1950 when communist North Korea invaded the South with six army
divisions. These North Korean forces, backed by impressive Soviet equipment
including tanks, made quick gains into the territory. The United States
decided to intervene in the defence of the South and, taking advantage of
the Soviet absence from the UN Security Council, proceeded to press for UN
resolutions condemning the invasion. Days later a resolution was passed
calling upon member countries to give assistance to South Korea to repulse
the attack. General Douglas MacArthur, then in charge of US forces in the
Pacific and of the occupation of Japan, was appointed commander of the joint
forces.
Under Trained and Under Prepared
Things began to go wrong almost immediately for the American troops. Those
who were rushed to the front line straight from occupation duty in Tokyo in
July 1950 were undertrained and underprepared. They were also badly led and
quickly defeated by superior North Korean forces. US commanders were
outmanoeuvred by North Korean units using guerrilla methods to target US
lines from the rear.
Detail from US military records (c)
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/about/copyright.shtml> But there was another
problem. The surprise attack from the North had generated a very real
refugee crisis. Just weeks after the conflict had begun, up to two million
refugees were streaming across the battlefield; they clogged the roads and
the UN lines.
Under pressure and fearing North Korean infiltration, the US leadership
panicked. Soon command saw all civilians as the enemy regardless. On 26 July
the US 8th Army, the highest level of command in Korea, issued orders to
stop all Korean civilians. 'No, repeat, no refugees will be permitted to
cross battle lines at any time. Movement of all Koreans in group will cease
immediately.' On the very same day the first major disaster involving
civilians struck.
The stone bridge near the village of No Gun Ri spans a small stream. It is
similar to a great many others that cross the landscape of South Korea,
except that the walls of this bridge were, until very recently, pockmarked
by hundreds of bullet holes. On the very day that the US 8th Army delivered
its stop refugee order in July 1950, up to 400 South Korean civilians
gathered by the bridge were killed by US forces from the 7th Cavalry
Regiment. Some were shot above the bridge, on the railroad tracks. Others
were strafed by US planes. More were killed under the arches in an ordeal
that local survivors say lasted for three days.
Deadly Orders
Yang Hae Chan, a survivor of the massacre at No Gun Ri (c)
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/about/copyright.shtml> 'The floor under the
bridge was a mixture of gravel and sand. People clawed with their bare hands
to make holes to hide in,' recalls survivor Yang Hae Chan. 'Other people
piled up the dead like a barricade, and hid behind the bodies as a shield
against the bullets.'
Corroborating the Korean survivors' testimony are the accounts of 35
veterans of the 7th Cavalry Regiment who recall events at No Gun Ri.
Perspectives differ, but the detailed memories of veterans recalling events
burnt into their souls by their first days in combat are as painful as they
are shocking.
'There was a lieutenant screaming like a madman, fire on everything, kill
'em all,' recalls 7th Cavalry veteran Joe Jackman. 'I didn't know if they
were soldiers or what. Kids, there was kids out there, it didn't matter what
it was, eight to 80, blind, crippled or crazy, they shot 'em all.'
Along with the My Lai atrocity 20 years later in Vietnam, the killings
discovered at No Gun Ri mark one of the largest single massacres of
civilians by American forces in the 20th century. When the news of the
killings at No Gun Ri was first broken by a team of investigative
journalists from the Associated Press in September 1999, the effects were to
be as seismic as the allegations themselves.
Darkness Revealed
America was deeply shocked by the AP report. Previously, the US Army had
dismissed the claims of South Korean survivors who, since 1960, had been
trying to tell the truth about the killings at No Gun Ri. The Army said that
US forces were not even in the area of No Gun Ri at the time of the
killings. But not only did new evidence put No Gun Ri firmly within the US
7th Cavalry area of operations at the time, the discovery of US veterans
willing to talk about events 50 years later made the massacre undeniable.
The Clinton administration quickly directed that the Pentagon, specifically
the Army, conduct an investigation into what actually happened at No Gun Ri.
Since the original AP report, more documents detailing refugee 'kill' orders
have been unearthed at the US national archives. They point to the
widespread targeting of refugees by commanders well after No Gun Ri. In
August 1950 there were orders detailing that refugees crossing the Naktong
River be shot. Later in the same month, General Gay, commander of the 1st
Cavalry Division (of which the 7th Cavalry Regiment involved at No Gun Ri
was part), actually ordered artillery units to target civilians on the
battlefield. And as late as January 1951, the US 8th Army was detailing all
units in Korea that refugees be attacked with all available fire including
bombing.
Detail from US military instructions (c)
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/about/copyright.shtml> New allegations have
also emerged of the indiscriminate killing of civilians in Korea. In August
1950, 80 civilians are reported to have been killed while seeking sanctuary
in a shrine by the village of Kokaan-Ri, near Masan in South Korea. Other
survivors recall 400 civilians killed by US naval artillery on the beaches
near the port of Pohang in September 1950, and dozens of villages across
southern South Korea report the repeated low-level strafing by US planes of
'people in white' during July and August 1950. A total of 61 separate
incidents involving the killing of civilians by US forces are now logged
with the South Korean authorities.
Denial
Detail from US Air Force memo (c)
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/about/copyright.shtml> The Pentagon inquiry
into No Gun Ri was finally released in January 2001. The basis of its
conclusions are doubtful. The investigation acknowledged the killing of
civilians at No Gun Ri by US forces, but it concluded that the killings that
took place there were not deliberate attacks but 'an unfortunate tragedy
inherent to war'. Yet whatever the confusion on the battlefield at the time,
clear orders had been given by command not to let refugees through the
lines. More importantly, documents showed orders had actually been received
by the 8th Cavalry Regiment, sister to the 7th Cavalry involved at No Gun
Ri. 'No refugees to cross the line. Fire everyone trying to cross the lines.
Use discretion in the case of women and children.' This was an order from
the headquarters of the 1st Cavalry Division.
More documents were discovered that showed that the Air Force was strafing
civilians at the request of the Army. Air Force Colonel Turner Rogers wrote
a memo the day before events at No Gun Ri. 'The Army has requested we strafe
all civilian refugee parties that are noted approaching our positions,' the
memo read. It went on to confirm the instructions had been acted upon. 'To
date, we have complied with the army request in this respect.'
Veterans Speak Out
Despite this the Pentagon maintains in the report that no orders were issued
to shoot refugees at No Gun Ri. This rather narrow frame of reference
effectively ignores whatever evidence there might be of other orders given
at the time to treat civilians as the enemy. Only orders specifically
mentioning No Gun Ri would qualify. Even so this is a surprising conclusion
to draw for a number of other reasons.
Firstly, the oral testimony given by veterans of the 7th Cavalry to the
Pentagon during its 14-month investigation may contradict the Pentagon's
position. This evidence has never been made fully public, but what has been
discovered by those allowed access to the material, is that a significant
number of the veterans interviewed did in fact recall orders to open fire on
the civilians at No Gun Ri.
Secondly, the 7th Cavalry communications log - the log that might have
contained evidence of such orders had they been given - has gone missing.
The significance of this is highlighted by Charles Hanley, one of the AP
journalists who first investigated No Gun Ri. '[The Pentagon] report
declares that there were no orders at No Gun Ri - and it declares that
flatly - but it doesn't have the document that would prove that one way or
the other.'
Seeking the Truth
A ceremony in Korea commemorating victims of the Korean War (c)
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/about/copyright.shtml> The inconsistencies
that surround the Pentagon's investigation have even led those brought in as
independent advisors to voice doubts. Pete McCloskey, a decorated Korean War
veteran and former Congressman, was brought in to advise on the Pentagon
report. He was disappointed with what was finally published. 'I think the
American government, the Pentagon and most government agencies don't want to
see the truth come out if it will embarrass the government.
'I think it's almost a rule of political science. The government will always
lie about embarrassing matters. And when you are up in the Pentagon a full
Colonel and have a chance to make General, and General with the chance to
become Chief of Staff, there's as much politics high in the Pentagon as
there is in the halls of Congress. And I think that the Army just chose to
try and down play the terrible character of Army leadership in 1950.'
It is now nearly 50 years since the end of the conflict in Korea. The only
major American investigation into the killing of refugees focused
exclusively on the activities of the US Army over a small geographic area
during one month of a conflict that lasted three years. Contradicting
testimony from veterans and Korean survivors, the report concluded that
there was no evidence to suggest that orders to kill civilians were given at
No Gun Ri. Clearly there are still many unanswered questions over American
involvement in Korea, questions that were not answered by the narrow view of
the US Army's investigation. Yet this burden now falls not on those
responsible for giving the orders, but on the veterans and survivors alike.
Find Out More!
Books
The Bridge at No Gun Ri by Charles J Hanley, Sang-Hun Choe and Martha
Mendoza with researcher Randy Herschaft (Henry Holt and Co, 2001)
About the Author:
Jeremy Williams produced Kill 'em All, a Timewatch documentary about the No
Gun Ri killings and American military conduct in Korea.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pws_qyQnCcU 








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